For an "action" to run, it needs to be active. Most of the time, all actions submitted are active, but it is possible to specify only a specific action as active; any non-active actions are ignored. See Jifty::Request.

AJAX

An acronym standing for Asynchronous Javascript And XML. Though technically incorrect, it is the buzzword that describes doing asynchronous requests to the server while the user waits. This can lead to very "dynamic" pages, as the browser does not need to refresh the entire page to update a small section of the screen. In Jifty, the sections of the screen are called "region"s. See Jifty::Web::PageRegion.

A concept stolen from Lisp, Scheme, Smalltalk, and Perl 6. The continuation of any particular piece of code is the deferred operations that care about the return value at that point. In the context of Jifty, a continuation is a deferred "request" that may pull "argument"s and the like from the "result"s of the current request. Continuations can be arbitrarily nested, so they are often useful to keep track of tangents that the user went on. See Jifty::Continuation.

database version

The database version is the "schema version" last installed or updated in the application's database. In general, the database version will always match the schema version. The exception is when Jifty is updated to a new schema version, your application updates to a new schema version, or a plugin updates to a new schema version. When this happens, you must "update" your database so that the database versions and schema versions match before running your application.

A section of HTML (at present, a Mason component) contained in a "region". Fragments are a kind of standalone Mason component which the browser can request individually. Because of this, they can only take strings and scalars as arguments, not references or objects!

element

A Mason component used by one or more other pages, which is not a whole page of itself. As opposed to fragmentselements are strictly internal, and never visible to the outside world by themselves. Elements typically live under a path beginning with or containing '/_elements'. This, and the whole idea of an element is strictly convention, but Jifty contains elements for things like page headers, menus, and showing keybindings out of the box to make your life easier.

mandatory

A property of a "parameter"; the user must enter a value for the action to validate. This is the simplest level of validation.

model

Jifty uses Jifty::DBI to store its data (though might use other storage tools at some later time). The model defines the "schema" and provides a package for creating, reading, updating, and deleting records stored in the database. The model is generally a subclass of Jifty::Record. Access multiple items from a model is performed through a "collection".

moniker

Every instance of a Jifty::Action has a moniker. Monikers serve as identifiers for actions, to associate arguments with actions and to access specific actions "by name". Monikers need not be globally unique, but they must be unique within a single request. Monikers have no semantic meaning. See "monikers" in Jifty::Action

A moniker is an arbitrary-length nonempty string containing no semicolons. It may not begin with a digit.

An area of the page which JavaScript can replace. The content in the region is a "fragment". Think of the region as the box and the fragment as the content in the box. See Jifty::PageRegion.

request

A single query which lists "action"s to run, together with a page or list of "fragment"s to return. This most often comes from the browser as query parameters, but may come from other sources as a JSON or YAML POST request. The answer to a request is a "response". See Jifty::Request.

A property of "form field"s. If a field is "sticky," values that the user entered appear there again when the page is rendered again, avoiding making the user type them again. Most "action"s have form fields which are sticky on failure, so the user can update the information and try again.

tangent

A tangent is a link or redirect that causes Jifty to save the current state into a "continuation" for a later "return". This operation is handy for situations when you want to jump to another page or form, but return to this page when the user is done with the "tangent" page. Because of the use of continuations, this can be especially handy because a user could go on multiple tangents and eventually return to the start.

upgrade

Generally, your Jifty application will change over time. Most of these changes will be simple changes to behavior or appearance. When changes are made to the "schema" structure of your database, you may need to perform an upgrade. An upgrade is the process by which you rename columns, initialize data, or otherwise update information that needs to be updated when a change to the database needs to be made. See Jifty::Upgrade, Jifty::Manual::Upgrading, and Jifty::Script::Schema.